Friday, May 11, 2018

Military And Intelligence News Briefs -- May 11, 2018

The future USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78) underway on its own power for the first time. The first-of-class ship — the first new U.S. aircraft carrier design in 40 years — will spend several days conducting builder's sea trials, a comprehensive test of many of the ship's key systems and technologies U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Ridge Leoni

SFGate/Bloomberg: Navy busts $12.9 billion cap on costliest U.S. aircraft carrier

The Navy's costliest vessel ever just got pricer, breaching a $12.9 billion cap set by Congress by $120 million, the service told lawmakers this week.

The extra money for the USS Gerald Ford built by Huntington Ingalls Industries Inc. is needed to replace faulty propulsion components damaged in a January failure, extend the vessel's post-delivery repair phase to 12 months from the original eight months and correct deficiencies with the "Advanced Weapons Elevators" used to move munitions from deep in the ship to the deck.

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Military And Intelligence News Briefs -- May 11, 2018

China's Navy Prepares to Close the Gap on the U.S. -- Stratfor

Chinese Fighters, Bombers Ring Taiwan, Show ‘Upgrade in Combat Capabilities' -- Sputnik

Report: North Korea weapons could be flown to France -- UPI

Russia backs off Syrian air defense after Putin-Netanyahu meeting -- UPI

Flood gates could open on US drone sales to the Middle East -- Defense News

UAE extends military reach in Yemen and Somalia -- Reuters

Bolivia Is Landlocked. Don't Tell That to Its Navy -- The Wired

British Armed Forces in Need of Up To $28.5 Billion Over Next Decade – UK MPs -- Sputnik

German revenue boom raises chance of defense budget hike -- Defense News

US Congress wants return on $1.5 billion investment in Israel missile shield -- Al-Monitor

This retired US Army lieutenant colonel got a pretty big promotion — in another country’s military -- Army Times

Pentagon to keep backing Lebanon military, despite Hezbollah gains -- Reuters

Air Force deployed mysterious drone to Afghanistan to catch terrorist planting roadside bombs -- Defense News

Former Air Force chief of staff talks RPAs, budget cuts and his regrets about shrinking the force -- Air Force Times

F-22s & F-35s Will Launch Recoverable Gremlins Attack Drones -- Warrior Maven

The U.S. Army is Looking for Its First New Submachine Gun Since WWII -- Popular Mechanics

The Army is selling 8,000 of its iconic M1911 pistols -- Business Insider/Task & Purpose

The newest weapon in the US Navy’s arsenal is now under construction -- Defense News

US Navy Christens New Littoral Combat Ship -- The Diplomat

US Navy Wants New Anti-Missile Interceptor System for Surveillance Planes -- Sputnik

Grunts may be one step closer to getting this Ops-Core style helmet -- Marine Times

The Corps wants more Javelins as it phases out aging TOWs -- The Marine Times

Military investigating if two Marines played role in Green Beret's death -- NBC

Overrun and outnumbered, special ops soldiers fought to the end in deadly Niger ambush -- Army Times

The U.S. Military's Niger Ambush Investigation Raises More Questions Than It Answers -- The Drive

Niger investigation: What went wrong, what’s being done to fix it -- Army Times

McCain unlikely to tank Trump’s CIA pick -- Politico

House panel lays foundation for future space force -- Space News

What to expect from AI, space and other tech over the next 18 months -- Aaron Mehta, C4ISRNet

A retired Navy SEAL commander says he learned one of his biggest leadership lessons through a mutiny -- Richard Feloni and Anna Mazarakis, Business Insider

How a Mugger Helped Create the NSA’s Post-9/11 Surveillance Program -- Slate

1 comment:

  1. Lots of failure in the Navy over the past few years.
    Fat Leonard a national disgrace.
    Fitzgerald and McCain collisions and deaths.
    Failures with the LCS, a ship in service going on 10 years and still not deployable.
    Ford class carrier costs and overruns
    DDG-1000 main gun is useless
    Green fuel obsessions resulted in exorbitant costs.

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